The Tribeca Film Festival Pulls Anti-Vax “Documentary”

… or Biggest Medical Health Success in Human History, which is what I’d go for.

Del Bigtree/Autism Media Channel

The Tribeca Film Festival is an extremely popular New York–based event designed to showcase the city as a destination for independent moviemakers. That’s great, and I’m glad it exists and supports non-Hollywood creators. However, this year it almost made a massive mistake that would have hurt it—and very likely others—in the long run.

Until Saturday, the festival was planning on airing an anti-vaccination film almost guaranteed to be full of dangerous misinformation. The good news is, after facing pressure from the media and scientists, it made the right decision: They pulled it from their lineup, and my sincere thanks goes to them for doing so. But it’s worth discussing, because things like this have happened before, and no doubt will again.

The “documentary” is called Vaxxed: From Cover-Up to Catastrophe, which right away gives you an idea of what it’s about. The trailer is available on the official film site, and it is loaded with anti-vax propaganda (they refused to provide screeners of the documentary to journalists).

Moreover, the film was directed by Andrew Wakefield. Yes, that Wakefield, the de-listed and disgraced doctor who started the modern anti-vax movement. I’ll get to him in a moment.

Based on the trailer, it appears to focus on the claim that in 2014 a whistleblower in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention leaked information that there was a massive cover-up inside the agency about a purported connection between vaccines and autism.

Let me be clear: This CDC conspiracy theory is on the level of the Apollo Moon hoax. It’s nonsense. But apparently the people behind Vaxxed think it’s real.

The Vaxxed trailer employs a lot of typical anti-vax rhetoric, for example confusing causation with correlation (that is, confusing timing with cause; children start showing signs of autism around the same time they get vaccinated, so anti-vaxxers assume that vaccines cause autism). It also features a laundry list of anti-vaxxers in it, including Reps. Dan Burton, R-Indiana, and Bill Posey, R-Florida, Dr. Jim Sears, and MIT senior researcher Stephanie Seneff.

Yeah, quite a guy. So why the hell was Tribeca even thinking of showing anything created by this man?

It turns out it was due to Robert De Niro.

De Niro is a co-founder of the festival and has an autistic son. At Respectful Insolence, Orac quotes from a letter he received from the Tribeca group:

I wanted to provide you with following statement from Robert De Niro, co-founder of the Tribeca Film Festival, regarding Vaxxed at the Festival:

Grace and I have a child with autism and we believe it is critical that all of the issues surrounding the causes of autism be openly discussed and examined. In the 15 years since the Tribeca Film Festival was founded, I have never asked for a film to be screened or gotten involved in the programming. However this is very personal to me and my family and I want there to be a discussion, which is why we will be screening VAXXED. I am not personally endorsing the film, nor am I anti-vaccination; I am only providing the opportunity for a conversation around the issue.

I understand the need to have a discussion about this issue … but that discussion has already been held, many times, and the conclusion is clear: Wakefield is a quack (at best), and vaccines don’t cause autism.

Worse still, a panel discussion planned for after the film screening was clearly biased toward anti-vaxxers, including reporter Sharyl Attkisson, who is an unwavering supporter of Wakefield even in the face of the tsunami of evidence against him.

Walking the walk.

Phil Plait

Even with De Niro’s possibly well-intentioned desires, airing this film wouldn’t invoke “a discussion.” It would’ve been a tacit (and, given the panel after, overt) approval of a group of people who ignore overwhelming scientific evidence at the very real risk of peril to public health. The anti-vaccination movement is a direct threat to children too young to be vaccinated—some of whom die from these diseases—the elderly, and the immunocompromised.

I love my family too, one of whom is immunocompromised. So to me, this is personal as well. That’s why my daughter, my wife, and I are fully vaccinated. We get our boosters on schedule, too.

So after all that, I’m very glad Tribeca decided to pull the film from the lineup. In doing so, De Niro said:

My intent in screening this film was to provide an opportunity for conversation around an issue that is deeply personal to me and my family. But after reviewing it over the past few days with the Tribeca Film Festival team and others from the scientific community, we do not believe it contributes to or furthers the discussion I had hoped for.

Precisely right. And kudos to him for saying so.

(Note: I wrote the first draft of this article before Tribeca decided to pull the film, and most of the original article remains intact; I’ll note that De Niro says essentially what I did: This discussion about vaccines and autism is over.)

I’m sure the anti-vaxxers will moan and wail over free speech—they always do when someone decides not to air their nonsense—but it’s not a free speech issue at all. First, Tribeca is not the United States government, so the First Amendment doesn’t apply. They have full discretion over the films they choose. Second, the anti-vaxxers still have the ability to spread their message on social media and on the usual websites and TV shows, as dangerous as this is.